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#Bad Gastein after-ski
lomatlennot · 2 years
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Alppien parhaat After-ski kohteet - Katso Afterski kuvat
Alppien parhaat After-ski kohteet – Katso Afterski kuvat
After-ski Alpeilla Alppien paras afterski! Kokonaisen laskettelupäivän jälkeen seuraa – afterski tietenkin! Alppimatkojen ulkomailla olevat experttimme, oppaat ja asiakkaamme ovat nyt tehneet listan Alppien parhaimmista afterskipaikoista. Onko sinun suosikkisi listalla? 1. St Anton – Itävalta Aloitamme legendaarisesta St Antonista. Täällä on todella vauhdikas huvielämä, monen mielestä Alppien…
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thelastchair · 5 years
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Alps 2019
(Written by Arthur Scopic - March 29, 2019)
Landing Zurich **** On landing at Amsterdams Schipol, I knew something wasn't right, not just the usual transatlantic blear, but odd chills and fever. Texting my pal Subtle Plague, I warned him that I may have a cold or flu and may be infectious. He dismissed any concerns, citing their own little germ trawler as being of greater potential for flus or colds and nobly insisted we meet.
So, after nearly missing the connection to ZRH due to customs clogging at Schipol, I boarded the flight to Zurich, dozed some more in that jetlag timewarp and embarked on the train for Konstanz from ZRH.
Konstanz, Subtle Plague **** Subtle Plague met me at the train station and ferried me to his house to meet his family and set me up for a nap before we headed out to the Gotthard zones. I considered just taking a hotel and convalescing but hope sprang eternal in my skiersoul, so next morning we headed out on the Swiss highways to the Gotthard tunnel and Airolo.
Konstanz
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It was over twenty years ago that I landed in Geneva and contracted a cold and rather than taking it easy, jumped into skiing around La Grave, Serre Chevalier, Puy St. Vincent and the Milky Way. But by the 6th day or so, while skiing at Val Thorens, I knew something was seriously wrong. I shortly spiraled into fill blown pneumonia, eventually requiring IV antibiotics on returning to the US.
Airolo ****
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So this time, I was going to be smarter and on arriving at Airolo, despite the pow and sunshine, I deferred on the skiing and snoozed in Subtle Plagues RV. I took solace in the fact that one of the more widely read ski weather forecasters had explicitly directed his followers to Airolo, resulting in crowding and pow frenzy that chewed up the snow at what is normally a low key area. Such is the internet.
At days end, we drove up a nearby valley and camped out for what ended up being one of the most fevered nights I'd ever had. My throat burned on every swallow and my head throbbed with a thundersome sinus headache resulting in little sleep. So once again, skiing that day was not for me. Subtle Plague was a prince about it all, understanding and left me to me convalescing.
Konstanz Again ****
At days end after Subtle and buddies had enjoyed a powdery tour, we rolled back to Konstanz in the RV. Konstanz is a beautiful town, with it's older buildings and neighborhoods having escaped some of the ravages of WWII by virtue of being on the Swiss border and thereby not targetted by bombing raids. I knew that Subtle and family had a busy Monday morning ahead of them so after sleeping Saturday night and being feasted and feted by their hospitality, I trundeled off in a train headed to St. Anton Sunday afternoon.
St. Anton, Haus Elisabeth, Arlberg Guides, Verwall, Hinterrendl **** I had initially planned to roll out East to the Gasteinertal and ski that zone, but the flu caused to me to reevaluate that plan. I wrote the wonderful folks at Hotel Echo Bad Gastein and cancelled my room there and dredged around for another option in St. Anton when I found Das-Elisabeth which fit my requirements of being reasonably close to the train station. So I booked a room there. It proved to be an excellent choice with a superb breakfast and quiet spot to finish this flu. I again chose not to ski the first day, but with a suggestion from the host, Berthe, found a doctor to check me out and write a script for the antibiotics I knew I'd need after this flu. I walked around the village in a howler snowstorm, got a good sleep and readied myself for the first turns of the trip.
St. Anton is HUGE and I not knowing it at all, I opted to try to find some guided options. The best deal I found was with the Arlberg-Guides who offered a guided group option for 97Euros. This turned out not only a great option, but fortuitous as well by virtue of meeting Sebastyn.
The lift system is staggering with a base terminal at the Galzigbahn looking like a spaceship.
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The day broke blue and crowds were massive with enormous lines at the Galzigbahn. Our guide circumnavigated that queue, opting for the Gampenbahn chair for a checkout run before taking us down into Schongraben for some quality pow.
Next up, we rode up into the Galzig zone, hoping to get up into the Schindlerspitz. But due to avalanche levels being up to 4, both the Schindlergrabahn and the Valuga were closed. On traversing out towards the Arlberg Pass, we could see a gargantuan liftline at the Arlenmaderbahn, so we took a high traverse to access the Albonabahn II.
View from Albonabahn II
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After a few laps down that we skied the North face down into Stuben and used the old Albonabahn chair to get back to the Albonabahn II and started down into a beautiful valley ending the day in Verwall with beer and local game charcuterie. ****************************************************************************************************
I found a sign for a museum that turned out to be a beautiful old chalet that was a combination ski museum and restaurant, so I went in for a light dinner.
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Karl Schranz's Kneissl White Stars
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Next day, another storm had moved in, so I elected to repeat with Arlberg Guides and again skied with Sebastyn, a sharp wit and keen skier who had grown up skiing in the Arlberg. We had a different guide who, after a warm up on the Gampenbahn, took us over to the North facing Rendelbahn zone. After riding several lifts we dropped over into Hinterrendl, a spectacular bowl of excellent powder with views obscured by storm.
Old door in St. Anton
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The day after, it was still storming but I wanted to have a little more free reign, so I elected to skip the Arlberg Guides. I had also moved hotels to the Hotel Kirchplatz which was a bit East of the town center and closer to the Nassereinbahn where I started the day. Lo and behold, there was Sebastyn who kindly offered to ski with me that day. After a couple of runs, we hooked up with his friend Victoria and spent a few laps skiing the powder in what I'll call the Galzig Gullies near the Osthangbahn chair. It was light, thigh deep snow in among the trees with decent visibility. After a bit, Vicki suggested that we meet up with her boyfriend Yannick who was to get off guide duty at noon, so we skied back down to the Nasserein base. Yannick got off and suggested another lap down the powder in Schongraben. While chatted on the lifts as we sampled snow over in the Galzig zone, we found that Victoria's mom is Berthe who manages Haus Elisabeth. The Freakwhency strikes again! We ended the day with beer and wienerschitzer at the Krazy Kangaroo around 3:00. A big thanks to Seb, Vicki and Yannick!
View from Hotel Kirchplatz
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Old St. Anton chalet
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The next day, Friday, was my last day in the Arlberg and it was forecast to dump with rising freezing levels. Sebastyn had to head back to school, so I decided just to roll solo around the Galzig Gullies and whatever else was visible. This proved to be not much. The day started with spooky snow fractures in the trees around the gullies, but failed to actually slide on the ski cuts I put in. So I raged solo mad laps mostly on the Galzigbahn until about 1:00 when it started to rain at the bottom. By 2:00 I was soaked, so I headed back to the Hotel Kirchplatz to wash and dry stuff. It's a great hotel with a sauna, wellness spa and free washer and dryer which I sorely needed. By 3:30 I was at the bahnhof and by 4:00, rolling to Klosters.
I can see why the Arlberg is so popular: it's massive and gets a lot of snow. At the same time, it's crowded and lots of the businesses in town are jaded by tourists. I was extremely lucky to hook up with Sebastyn, Victoria and Yannick who were incredibly warm and abundant and convinced me that my aversion to St. Anton as an instance of a megaresort, was ill founded. I'll be back. ****************************************************************************************************
Klosters, Hotel Wynegg, bw_wp_hedonism, Gargellan, St. Antonien **** After a 3.5 hour jaunt on Austrian and Swiss trains, I stepped onto the platform in Klosters Platz, right next to the soaring Gotschnabahn tram. I had been in touch with bw_wp_hedonism who had generously offered to meet up. I had also dug around for a reasonably priced room, a somewhat rare beast in Klosters and had stumbled across Wynegg, a recently revamped old hotel which was establishing itself as a haute gourmando locus. So I booked a room there, a 10 minute walk from the bahnhof. bw_wp_hedonism pinged me via whatsapp and turned up in the hotel bar. We made plans for the next day to poke around Parsenn, one of 5 enormous lift systems in the Davos/Klosters complex.
I was a little late and with blue sky and fresh pow, the lines at the Gotschnabahn were significant. bw_wp_hedonism had waited and we ran into his buddy Tom and were off. We raged all over the Parsenn, up to the summit via the Furka lifts and then the Gipfelbahn where we found sweet deep untracked snow on a variety of North facing exposures.
View from Schiferbahn gondola
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The area is laced with dozens of groomers that keep lots of tourists busy and provided access to an innumerable wad of excellent off piste options. After a couple of laps on the Schiferbahn in excellent pow, we met with a bunch of bw_wp_hedonism at the midmountain near the base of the Furka lift for lunch. After a lengthy lunch we made a few more sidecountry laps by taking bootpacks and traverses off the Totalp zone, eventually making apres ski at Berghaus Schifer.
View from midmountain Parsenn, untapped offpiste above
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I rolled back to the Wynegg for a shower and nap before taking a table in the restaurant at 8:30.
The food was superb, starting with an excellent salad, I ordered a soup that was celestial: a foamed saffron broth and perfectly poached prawns. The wine list was fantastic with a crisp chardonnay and an excellent local, rich pinot noir by the glass. I finished with the specialty pizokel noodle and lamb in a deliciously deft creamed curry sauce. I zonked out by 22:00.
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bw_wp_hedonism had referred to doing a tour I had eyeballed for years, one that went over a little pass above the Madrisa area over into the Voralberg and the Gargellen ski area, then back over to Switzerland and the tiny medieval town of St. Antonien.
**************************************************************************************************** On waking, we texted back and forth making plans to meet at the top of the Madrisabahn and head out. And so we did. It was amazing with an easy, gently ascending skin S/SE from the top of the Schaffugli lift to the Schlappiner Joch and the border with Austria.
Looking south from Madrisa
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On the skintrack to Schlappiner Joch. Schlappiner where?
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At Schlappiner Joch
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The ski down from there was on beautiful sparsely tracked North facing steep slopes with a long and easy run out down to Gargellen where we had to stop in at the base of the gondola to get single ride passes back up to the top of the Kristelbahn and a slightly more significant climb up to the Sankt Antonier Joch.
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From there. it was a West/Northwest facing series of virgin pow lines draining down into a creek gully which fed us out onto a road requiring the canonical walk in ski boots down into the atmospheric town of St. Antonien clustered around a spike steepled church dated 1492. There we enjoyed beer and charcuterie until the bus came and we wound around curves connecting ancient villages down to the train station at Kublis.
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St. Antonien
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At the Kublis bahnhof, I thanked bw_wp_hedonism and pal Tom for their gracious abundance, I had had an amazing time around Davos, again, more data that eroded my reluctance to ski at the more reknown areas.
I rallied back to Klosters and the Hotel Wynegg, extending my sincere thanks to Cedric and all the folks who run an incredibly warm and tasteful hotel to which I hope to return. Grabbing my clothes and gear, I hopped the train for Rueras, Switzerland to meet up with the motley band of maggots at MtLodge
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Rueras, MtLodge **** The train actually ended in Disentis with the last leg of the trip to Rueras in the trusty Swiss postbus which kindly dropped me at the very door to the hotel. There I met the owner, Michele, an effusive and warm persona who set me up with a sweet room and delicious food and drink. He had also queued up a number of routes and tours that I had ogled for years. But first, sleep. It was dumping.
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Morning brought delicious coffee and the classic Euro breakfast spread while making plans with all the k00ks who had rendezvoused at MtLodge With fairly heavy snow coming down, we decided to ride lifts from Dieni, a 10 minute walk from the hotel, over towards Andermatt and see how far we got. The forecast 5-10 cm turned out to be more like 20-30 cm and deeper in the wind loaded places. At Dieni, we made 1 lap before heading up and over into Val-Val where we kind of got stuck lapping a sweet stash of pow at least 4 times before punching it further West into the Oberalppass zone and ripping lines of powder varying from boot top to waist deep until lunch was called at the hutte there. When Mr. Mike and I tried to share a charcuterie board, the waiter either misunderstood or was taking the tourists for a ride, yelling "YOU ORDER, I MAKE" as we tried to clarify we only wanted 1 order.
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Afternoon brought a few more laps on the Schneehuenderstck gondy before we started making our way back towards Dieni where again we spun run after run of virgin pow turns, finally some of us throwing in the towel at 3:00 after milking one more untracked zone. We took the sled run all the way back to Rueras and MtLodge for drinks and a delicious dinner. More of the maggot crew had arrived.
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Dieni
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Next morning Tuesday, most of the fistful had targeted Andermatt, so we took the early train over and ramped and raged off the Gemsstock tram. Skiing the West couloirs first thing proved to be not such a good idea for some. After a warm up, a few of us went out to ski the Giraffe which only had about 15 tracks in it. We returned to it again later to find only 30 or so tracks. After a few more front side runs, the whole fistful took the Guspis down to Hospental which had wide swaths of uncut snow and the usual stunning scenery, ending with beer and dried meats at the Gotthard Haus before a train ride back to Rueras.
Guspis at 4:00 pm
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Skiing into Hospental
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Next day, Wednesday, the host with the most, Michele at mt-lodge, had arranged enough transport for us to go over to St. Moritz via the Juler Pass and Bivio. Once at Corvatsch, the highest ski area in St. Moritz, we met Michele's buddy Matteo who took us first down the Northwest couloir to ski acres of stunning pow, then over to Val Roseg past Piz Roseg and the Morteratsch Gletscher and down to lunch at Hotel Restaurant Roseg Gletscher which was awesome. Then an ugly 37 minute long pole and skate out to Pontresina to catch the bus over to Corviglia where we took the 2 stage funicular and a chair ride. Then a little traverse and bootpack to drop into Val Bever with hectares of uncut, Northwest facing powder skiing. The day ended at Gasthaus Spinas with beer and another series of train and bus rides back to pizza in Celerina.
Lunch of cream of asparagus soup with prawn at Hotel Restaurant Roseg Gletscher
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Icefall off back of Piz Roseg
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Piz Roseg
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Dropping into Val Bever
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Thursday, the morning destination was Disentis, a 5 minute train ride to Acla da Fontauna and a short walk up to the tram.It was a gorgeous bluebird day with evidence of the suns heat on some of the south facing slopes. After a warm up, we took a short skin up to one of the entries to Val Strem to the West. With a little downclimb from the col into a couloir, we were set for a few thousand vertical of Northwest facing pow surrounded by rock and ice. We skied out to the train at Sedrun and hopped it, going West pver to Andermatt to meet with another portion of the crew. The afternoon was spent mostly skiing in the main bowl under the upper Gemsstock and finishing with a lap out into the Felsental where we continued to find good soft lightly tracked powder.
Val Strem entrance couloir
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Scott smoking up the Val Strem pow
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Val Strem from the bottom
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Felsental
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Friday, the last day at Rueras, we had planned to do the Oberalpstock, a well known descent of over 2000 meters, and one I had lusted after for a decade. North facing down into the Maderental valley. Michele had arranged for guides, some Italian friends of his and we  were off to start at 8:30 on the early Disentis tram. The original plan had been for the group of 17 to split into 2 groups, one to do the Oberalpstock, which has some technical parts, and the other group to take a more mellow tour down into Val Strem. Unfortunately, our guides were not comfortable with splitting the group, so some of us decided to not take the tour and instead ski pistes at Disentis.
The climb involved a fairly easy skin to start with then a bit of a traverse to a via ferrata that climbs a rocky section and leads onto another traverse followed by a short downhill section. I am notoriously slow on the skin track, so by the time we skied the short downhill section and started another longer climb, I was far behind the main group. At one point the skin track split with one variation going to the climbers left and up to the summit of the Oberalpstock itself. The right branch took a mellower ascent to a shoulder where the actual skiing down the North side began. I was convinced the group had headed up the summit and I was lagging, so I headed up intent on catching up with the rest of the group. But in fact, they had taken the mellower right branch and were waiting for me there. Hell bent on summiting, I argued in broken English with the guide, Rosso who relented and accompanied me to the summit where to my surprise there were no other members of the group. So I skied down mashed potato snow from the south facing summit and sidestepped to catch the group.
Oberalpstock traverse before via ferrata
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Climbing the via ferrata
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Oberalpstock summit selfie
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View across first portion of Oberalpstock after via ferrata
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View from the Oberalpstock summit
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Looking down into Maderental 2400 vertical meters below
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Skiing down the Oberalpstock
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The Oberalpstock is enormous and despite a lot of tracks, we found sections of uncut, consistent steep pitches rolling North into the Maderental of vertical drop around 2200 meters. One section near the bottom was hard ice and the guides set up ropes to help control that section.
Eventually we skied corn in an avalanche chute down into a cow pasture. It was an all-time route appropriate to end the trip.
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Walking along the Maderental
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Special thanks to Michele for organizing the trips to St. Moritz, the Oberalpstock and providing warm, abundant hospitality at MtLodge. Also thanks to my ski fiend pals Subtle Plague, bw_wp_hedonism and all the maggot k00ks who showed up to sample skiing in the Swiss Alps.
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MountainLodge
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vacationsoup · 4 years
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New Post has been published on https://vacationsoup.com/ski-safari/
Ski Safari in Salzburg
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Have you ever heard of a ski safari before?Are you one of those skiers who shred piste after piste and love skiing/snowboarding many kilometres per day on different pistes to challenge yourself?Are you one of those competitive types who check how many km of pistes you have done in the day and compare yourself on skiline against other skiers?Well if this is you, you will probably love a ski safari where you get to test a different ski resort every day!The Hochkönig ski area has 120km of pistes, across 6 peaks, 5 villages and has plenty to offer the beginner or intermediate/improving skier for a week's skiing. However, if you don't like skiing the same piste twice, or if you have been to the Hochkönig before and would like to experience something new, your ski pass covers you for all of the Ski Amadé region which has over 750km of pistes - ski and snowboarding heaven! We suggest skiing a different resort every day, and each resort is a maximum of 45mins drive from Haus Schneeberg. You will need a car, or we can organise transport for you, and you need to be able to ski red runs confidently to experience the ski safari! 
Here is our suggested itinerary for your ski safari:
Day 1 - Hochkönig, Königstour.
It offers spectacular views of the Hochkönig mountain range as you keep the range in view throughout the ski region. Ski at least 35km of pistes starting at Mühlbach, passing through the villages of Dienten, Hinterthal, Hintermoos, Maria Alm. Take pictures at the top of all of the 6 peaks on the King's chairs provided.  Stop for lunch either in one of the many mountain restaurants in Maria Alm offering very tasty food, or at the top of Gabühel at the Steinbockalm with amazing views.On the way back to Mühlbach stop off for a Glühwein or hot chocolate at Tiergartenalm or Zapferlalm. The Hochkönig ski region tends to have smaller queues than neighbouring resorts, which is why we recommend this on a Sunday, one of the busiest days of the week.You can also start extra early on a Wednesday for early morning skiing at an extra cost and be the first to ski on freshly prepared pistes.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LCYMXuVJsY
Day 2 - Snowspace Salzburg - Alpendorf /Wagrain/Flachau- 120km of pistes
Start at Alpendorf, near Sankt Johann im Pongau, a 20 minute drive from Haus Schneeberg, and experience 3 resorts in one day.The bowls behind Alpendorf keep you high in altitude, and therefore, the snow tends to be in very good condition. The G Link lift now links the 2 aspects of the Wagrain ski area so you can travel seamlessly between Alpendorf and Flachau. There is a new chairlift on the link back from Wagrain to Alpendorf, which now cuts out most of the wait time! Be careful to time yourself so you know when you need to turn back so not to miss the last lift! In the winter season 2020/21 Snow Space Salzburg will be amongst the largest ski areas in Austria. With the new Panorama Link cable car, which connects Snow Space Salzburg with the ski area Flachauwinkl / Kleinarl and the new construction of the Flying Mozart cable car in Wagrain, winter sports enthusiasts will be able to use more than 200 kilometers of slopes.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYBDbiR2Phw
Day 3 - Zauchensee / Flachauwinkl 44km of pistes
Park at Flachauwinkl, with easy access from the motorway to both sides of the mountain, a 35 minute drive from Haus Schneeberg.Spend the morning at Zauchensee and ski the FIS ladies downhill run, and experience the small mountain village and then swap mountains for the afternoon and ski from Flachauwinkl over to Kleinarl. If you do this the second week in January, the FIS ladies downhill and Super G events are held this week at Zauchensee and you can see the ski stars training from Thursday onwards, and competing at the weekend. As mentioned above, this ski area will be linked to Snowspace Salzburg for 2020/21 ski season creating a 200km of pistes ski area in total.
Day 4 - Schladming ski area 123km of pistes
Park at Reiteralm, 40 minutes drive from Haus Schneeberg and ski over the 4 mountains from Reiteralm to Hauser Kaibling. Reiteralm is the training peak for the international ski elite! The elite members of the ÖSV (Austrian Ski Association) train on the Reiteralm alongside numerous international World Cup ski teams every ski season! You may be skiing alongside Alexis Pinturault, Dave Ryding, or you may even catch Marcel Hirsher!  Hauser Kaibling is great for families, with interactive pistes, and great for advanced skiers with some challenging runs.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Au4oM7LToRQ
Day 5 - Großarl Tal, 73km of pistes
35 minutes drive from Haus Schneeberg, you can ski from the pretty village of Grossarl, all the way over to Dorfgastein, over easy and intermediate pistes. There are also 10km of freeride routes for experience skiers.
Day 6 - Gasteinertal, 100km of pistes
Choose from Bad Hofgastein, Bad Gastein, SportgasteinSportgastein has 26km of pistes and the resort is high 1600m - 2650m, so is good if snow conditions lower down are not too great. It is fantastic on a sunny day, but we would avoid in bad weather as it is quite exposed, and with very few trees to provide shelter and better vision. It is being advertised as a freeride centre, and is great for off piste skiing. It is a longer drive from the house, just over 1 hour, but it is worth it if the conditions are good! Bad Hofgastein is the closest resort, and new for 2019, a brand new gondola to replace the funicular. Ski over to Angertal and down into Bad Gastein. Bad Gastein is in between Bad Hofgastein and Sport Gastein, and has ski lifts going up to 2492m. Choose your resort depending on the weather and the conditions!https://youtu.be/mOWE38jp-G4There are also some other smaller resorts in the area which are also included on the ski pass, such as Filzmoos, Radstadt, Altenmarkt, and there is also the Dachstein Glacier, if snow conditions are not great lower down. Please feel free to ask us for any more information! At the end of each day check out how many km of pistes you have done with skiline technology by inputing your ski pass number into the website Ski line  See accommodation Book Now Contact Us
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becybabe-blog · 7 years
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23.1.19 Salzburg- a beautiful place that left us wondering ‘where are all of the people?’
This morning we said goodbye to our lovely host. He may seriously be one of the cutest, most friendly, obliging and generous man I have ever met. Last night we bumped into him on the way home and he asked us where we were headed in the morning. On hearing we were taking a bus to the train station in town he offered us a lift there the next morning. On getting ready in the morning and hearing him call “hallo?” I came down to hear him tell me that although we had declined a breafast that morning, he had layed out cakes and coffee for us! Little did we know that his wife had made all three of the cake types! Then he dropped us at the station after having an intriguing conversation in the car about the bear population and conservation in Slovenia. Im gonna nerd out a bit here, but apparently, they have a whole forest and city somewhere that was cordoned off during the cold war era due to political reasons (apparently it was used for weapons and military etc) and there the bear population has flourished. Apparently, in the area they have a problem with bears moving into human territory and their is lots of conflict between sheep farms and the hungry animals. Our host said that this was the fault of the sheep farmers as traditionally Slovenians never farmed sheep for this reason and lamb is not traditionally part of their diet. Bears from this area were also imported to Franze, who im guessing hunted out their bears long ago. However, according to our host, all of the reintroduced bears we shot shortly after being realised. Another conservation case where human dimensions were igored and the endeavour failed because of it. Anyway, to our relief, our host confirmed that the footprints we had seen had very likely come from a bear, despit the fact that they should be hibernating and there shouldn’t have been any awake. He also told us that if we had come just a week later, lake bled would likely have completely froze over and we could have walked across the ice!!!
We said our goodbyes at the station and Tim and I heaved our luggage onto the train once again. The train ride was the most beautiful one we have had yet. The train travelled almostly exclusively through the mountains, which could seen throughout the journey rising on all sides of the train. We also passed many very quaint skiing villages. We passed one called Bad Gastein that was steeped in thick powder snow and the most temping looking ski slope. Im really keen to go skiing but I’ll have to work hard to convince Tim, who isnt a big fan of ski lifts.
We arrived at Salzburg in the early afternoon and I directed us to our hostel where we dropped our bags off and headed out to a restaurant for lunch. I had the most delicious Spinat Knockel (spinach dumplings), Tim had Cordon Bleu and we got dupped into paying $5 for bread which really wasnt worth it and which we thought was free 😜
After that we climbed the mountain to the castle as Tim loves conquering hills. Unfortunately it was already closed but it was a nice walk. Feeling pretty tired we decided to take it easy and walked to a big cinema to see LaLa Land. It was such a fanstastic movie. We bought salads from Spa on the way home and ate them in our hostel before going to bed.
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lomatlennot · 2 years
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Alppien parhaat After-ski kohteet - Katso Afterski kuvat
After-ski Alpeilla
Alppien paras afterski!
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Kokonaisen laskettelupäivän jälkeen seuraa – afterski tietenkin! Alppimatkojen ulkomailla olevat experttimme, oppaat ja asiakkaamme ovat nyt tehneet listan Alppien parhaimmista afterskipaikoista. Onko sinun suosikkisi listalla? 1. St Anton - Itävalta
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Aloitamme legendaarisesta St Antonista. Täällä on todella vauhdikas huvielämä, monen mielestä Alppien paras. Kolmea suurta afterskipaikkaa; Mooserwirt Krazy Kanguruh ja Taps ei kannata kiertää kaukaa vaan näissä kannattaa vierailla lomaviikkosi aikana St Antonissa. . 2. Val Thorens - Ranska
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Ranskassa osataan myös. Val Thorens on täynnä vauhdikkaita baareja, ravintoloista ja klubeja. Kuuluisin ja paras afterski on tunnetussa La Folie Doucessa jonka 700 m2 kokoisella tanssilattialla, ulkona, keskellä rinnettä, kukaan ei ole paikallaan vaan kaikki tanssivat hyvän musiikin tahdissa. . 3. Ischgl - Itävalta
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Huippumodernissa Ischglissä on tirolilainen kuuluisa ja sykkivä afterski jonne tullaan kaikkialta maailmasta. Hiihtoalueella järjestetään suuria bileitä ja konsertteja joissa on ollut esiintymässä mm. Bob Dylan, Rihanna, Katy Perry, Elton John ja moni muu. . 4. Bad Gastein - Itävalta
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Bad Gasteinissa on hyvä tarjonta vauhdikkaita baareja joihin mennä nauttimaan kylmää vaahtoavaa pitkän laskettelupäivän jälkeen. Keskustassa sijaitseva Silver Bullet on suosituin paikka jossa on afterskillä elävää musiikkia ja kuuluisia vierailevia tähtiartisteja. . 5. Cervinia - Italia
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Cerviniassa iloista afterskitä vietetään niin alhaalla kylässä kun rinteessäkin. Cervinian suurin aurinkterassi on LOVE joka on Cretazhissin yläasemalla. Täällä nautit virkistävän juoman hyvän elävän musiikin ja DJ -musan tahdissa. . 6. Canazei - Italia
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Erilainen mutta hieno afterski on tarjolla nautiskelijoille ja aurinkoa rakastaville upeassa Canazeissa. Kylässä ja rinteissä on hienoja terassibaareja joissa nautitaan Aperolista, viineistä, Birra Moretista, kinkuista, juustoista ja muista paikallisista herkuista. .
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